Hanoi (VNA) - 🐲Kon Ka Kinh National Park is located on the Kon Tum Plateau, in the areas of districts Mang Yang, KBang, and Dak Doa of Gia Lai Province. The center of the park is situated in the Commune of Ayun, Mang Yang district, northeast of Gia Lai Province.
With the purpose of preserving subtropical forests in the high mountains with species of gymnosperm, Kon Ka Kinh National Park was one of four national parks in Vietnam, together with three other national parks in Vietnam: Ba Be, Chu Mom Ray and Hoang Lien), also one of 27 national parks in ASEAN was listed on ASEAN Heritage Park. Kon Ka Kinh National Park is a priority zone for the protection of biodiversity of Vietnam as well as ASEAN. Reportedly, the garden takes its name after the name of Kon Ka Kinh highest mountain, higher than 1.748m above the sea level. The mountain is also known as the “roof of Gia Lai province”. Winning the top of Kon Ka Kinh has always been the dreams of many adventurous tourists. It is most suitable to visit Kon Ka Kinh in the period from January to June (the dry season in Western Highland). Currently, Board of Management of Kon Ka King Park has initially implemented many activities to develop tourism such as: natural paths ecotourism, Winning top of Kon Ka King, holiday tourism, studying wild animals, and cultural tourism. To the north of the national park, elevations gradually increase towards Mount Ngoc Linh, the highest point in the central Annamites. To the south and west, the topography is flatter, and altitudes are below 500 m. Altitudes within the national park range from 570 m in the Ba river valley, to 1,748 m at the summit of Mount Kon Ka Kinh.Kon Ka Kinh National Park has 33,565 natural forest, accounting for 80% of its total area. It is home to mountainous biological typical lives. There are about 20 square kilometres of broadleaf and needle leaf trees, primarily Pomu (Fokienia hodginsii).
It is home to 428 animal species, of which, 223 species of vertebrates living on land (34 ordos, 74 families) and 205 species Invertebrates (such as butterfly) of 10 families of (Lepidoptera).
The National Park is also a globally important site for the conservation of amphibian diversity. Kon Ka Kinh supports a number of amphibian species endemic to the Annamite mountains, including four species assessed as globally threatened during the Global Amphibian Assessment: Leptobrachium banae, L.xanthospilum, Rana attigua and Rhacophorus baliogaster.
VNA